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The United States Congress

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The United States Congress Suppose you were an idiot. And suppose you were a member of Congress. But I repeat myself. Mark Twain – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The United States Congress


1
The United States Congress
  • Suppose you were an idiot. And suppose you
    were a member of Congress. But I repeat myself.
  • Mark Twain

2
Differences in the House and Senate
  • The House of Representatives
  • More partisan and unified
  • More loyalty to party
  • More structured and organized
  • Majority rules always
  • Limited debate and amendments
  • The Senate
  • Senators more powerful individually
  • Less party-oriented and party-dependent
  • Looser rules of debate and amendments
  • Minority can block the majority (the
    filibuster)

3
Special Rules of the Senate
  • Unlimited debate
  • Bills brought to floor by
  • consent of party leaders
  • Filibusters
  • (can be ended by a
  • cloture vote,
  • 60 votes)
  • The hold put on bills
  • non-germane amendments
  • riders, Christmas Tree Bills

4
Structure of the House
  • The Majority Party
  • Speaker of the House
  • Nancy Pelosi (D - CA)
  • Elected by House members
  • Only Congressional office mentioned by the
    Constitution

5
Structure of the House
  • The Majority Leader
  • Steny Hoyer (D MD)
  • The Majority Whip
  • James Clyburn (D SC)

6
Structure of the House
  • The Minority Leader
  • John Boehner (R OH)
  • The Whip
  • Roy Blunt (R MO)

7
Structure of the Senate
  • President of the Senate
  • Dick Cheney
  • Duties
  • presides over the Senate
  • can not vote unless there is a tie
  • rarely present in the Senate
  • President Pro Tempore replaces,
  • Robert Byrd (D-WV)

8
Structure of the Senate
  • The Majority Leader
  • Harry Reid (D NV)
  • The Majority Whip
  • Richard Durban ( D - IL)

9
Structure of the Senate
  • The Minority Leader
  • Mitch McConnell ( R - KY)
  • The Minority Whip
  • Trent Lott ( R - MS)

10
Party Leadership- Influence on Legislation
  • Assignment of members to committees
  • Assignment of committee chairs
  • Scheduling
  • Agenda setting (rules committee)
  • Party discipline
  • Use of media
  • Recognition on floor
  • Control of electoral support

11
Member Voting Behavior
  • Three primary theories
  • 1) representational view- members vote to please
    their constituents
  • 2) organizational view- members primarily respond
    to cues from colleagues
  • 3) attitudinal view- the members ideology
    determines his/her vote

12
Congressional Caucuses
  • Rivaling parties in terms of source of policy
    leadership
  • Types
  • Intraparty- share similar ideology
  • Personal Interest- issue oriented (arts, human
    rights)
  • Constiutency- share representation of common
    groups/regions

13
The Committees
  • Four Types
  • Standing (permanent),
  • Joint (for investigations)
  • Select (info gathering)
  • Conference (to reconcile
  • different bills from
  • House and Senate)

14
The Committees
  • Most Important (House)
  • Ways And Means
  • Appropriations
  • Rules
  • Most Important (Senate)
  • Finance
  • Judiciary
  • Appropriations

15
The Committees
  • Chair Positions
  • Based on seniority (usually)
  • Majority party holds chairs
  • Power to hold or move bills forward
  • Conducts hearings

16
The Committees
  • Staff (CRS,GAO,CBO)
  • Does research
  • Gathers information
  • Assigned to committees
  • or to Congress itself

17
Committees-Elements that Effect Legislative
Process
  • Specialization- members develop policy expertise,
    independence for exec. branch, more attention to
    legislation, better leg.?
  • Party Representation-reflective of the chamber as
    a whole, pushes agenda, determines leadership of
    committee
  • Reciprocity/Logrolling-vote trading, exchanges,
    speeds process, government does more, more pork
    (earmarks)

18
Powers of Congress
  • Non-legislativeOversight,
  • Investigative (i.e. Watergate)

19
Powers of Congress
  • Non-legislative
  • Electoral chooses president when no majority
    is achieved in Electoral College

20
Powers of Congress
  • Non-legislative
  • Executive Senate Confirms appointments of
    the president
  • Also confirms treaties

21
Powers of Congress
  • Non-legislative
  • Impeachment House files charges,
  • Senate acts as jury, Chief Justice presides

22
Powers of Congress
  • Non-legislative
  • Amendment two thirds of House and Senate
    needed to send amendments to States (3/4 needed
    for ratification)

23
Powers of Congress
  • Types
  • Expressed Article I, Section VIII
  • Implied necessary and proper clause
  • (the Elastic Clause)

24
The Electoral Connection
  • Advantages of the incumbent
  • Money Communication with voters

  • franking or

  • free mail
  • Service to constituents
  • credit
    claiming

25
The Electoral Connection
  • Advantages of the incumbent
  • Position-taking
  • name recognition

26
The Electoral Connection
  • Advantages of the incumbent
  • Lack of quality opponents

  • Ignorant voters

27
The Electoral Connection
  • Reasons for defeatgerrymandering
  • Scandal Redistricting
    Shifts in

  • the

  • electorate

  • 1932

  • 1994

28
The Electoral Connection
  • Usually nonfactors
  • Foreign Policy Economy coattails
  • Can be factors occasionally (2006?)

29
Resolutions
  • Simple- passed by only one house, effects it
    only, not signed by Pres., not a law
  • Concurrent- effects both houses, not a law
  • Joint- essentially a law, passed by both houses,
    signed by the President, most used to propose
    Constitutional amendments (not signed by Pres.)

30
How a Bill Becomes A Law!
  • Public Bills- pertains
  • to public affairs
  • Generally
  • Private Bills-
  • pertains to a
  • particular
  • individual,
  • now very rare

31
How a Bill Becomes A Law!
  • Bill is introduced by a member in House
  • Hello, Bill!

32
How a Bill Becomes A Law!
  • Bill sent to the Rules Committee, to determine
    which committee is to work on it (or it can be
    pigeonholed)

  • bill dies

33
How a Bill Becomes A Law!
  • Sent to the Committee, assigned to a subcommittee
    (stuck-discharge petition)
  • Subcommittee holds hearings, performs studies,
    and makes revisions (mark-up)

34
How a Bill Becomes A Law!
  • Subcommittee reports it back to full committee
  • Committee can either
  • amend it and approve it

  • pigeonhole it,
  • kill it

35
How a Bill Becomes A Law!
  • Back to the Rules Committee
  • Sets guidelines on
  • length of debate
  • amendments, yes or no
  • puts on the calendar

36
Voting Procedures
  • House of Representatives
  • 1) voice vote- shout yea or nay
  • 2) division vote- stand and are counted
  • (voice/division-names not recorded)
  • 3) teller vote- pass two tellers- yea and nay
  • 4) roll call vote- electronic now
  • Senate
  • Use roll call vote- not electronic

37
How a Bill Becomes A Law!
  • Full House Debate or Comm. Of the Whole
  • YES on to the Senate
  • NO bummer!

38
How A Bill Becomes a Law!
  • Bill introduced to the Senate by a member
  • Assigned to appropriate committee by Senate
    leadership (no Rules Committee in the Senate)

39
How A Bill Becomes a Law!
  • Subcommittee hearings, mark-ups, etc.
  • Report to the full committee

40
How A Bill Becomes a Law!
  • Committee can kill it or pass it
  • Sends it to the Senate leadership to be put on
    the calendar

41
How A Bill Becomes a Law!
  • Full Senate debate, filibusters, amendments,
    final vote
  • If yes conference committee
  • If no big bummer!

42
How A Bill Becomes a Law!
  • Conference Committee
  • made up of both House and Senate members
  • works out differences in the two bills
  • Sent back to original
  • body for final vote
  • No debate or
  • amendments

43
How A Bill Becomes a Law!
  • Sent to President
  • If signed
  • ITS A LAW!
  • If Vetoed
  • 2/3 vote to
    override

44
Influences on Legislation
  • The President Courts Events
  • the media
  • Interest Groups

45
Influences on Legislation
  • Party
    Constituents
  • Mean People AP
    Government classes
  • (not really)
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